[Image: A telephone tower in Stockholm, Sweden, courtesy of the Tekniska Museet].
Trying to catch up on the huge variety of things saved over the summer while out on our most recent jaunt for Venue, I've got an awful lot of quick links, now less-than-current news items, and a few longer reads that you've no doubt seen elsewhere at this point, but I thought I'd go through and choose a few for posting.
[Image: A telephone tower in Stockholm, Sweden, courtesy of the Tekniska Museet].
In this case, we're looking at a telephone tower in downtown Stockholm, one that stood from roughly 1887-1913, and that served at least 5,000 local phones lines—lines that take on the literal feel of a sketch or drawing as they stretch over the streets like some urban-scale loom enthroned over the city, weaving conversations together from every district. It's a cast-iron stupa through which all voices must pass.
[Image: A telephone tower in Stockholm, Sweden, courtesy of the Tekniska Museet].
There are a few more photos available at the Tekniska Museet's Flickr set, but here is a selection of some of the most interesting—
[Images: A telephone tower in Stockholm, Sweden, courtesy of the Tekniska Museet].
—including a street scene of people walking to or from home with this strange skeletal structure seemingly waiting for them at the end of the lane, listening and dystopian—
[Image: A telephone tower in Stockholm, Sweden, courtesy of the Tekniska Museet].
—or this view of it blending into its urban context. It could almost pass as a cathedral or as the intimidating battlements of an unfinished electromagnetic fortress in the middle of the downtown core.
[Image: A telephone tower in Stockholm, Sweden, courtesy of the Tekniska Museet].
The weird and invisible mysticism of the phone system is laid bare, its nervous system exposed above the roofs of Stockholm and strung up on a tower like the pelt of some rare and conquered animal, forced to host even our most inconsequential conversations.
[Image: A telephone tower in Stockholm, Sweden, courtesy of the Tekniska Museet].
(Spotted via Gizmodo).
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